HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1909-12-02, Page 7r and, 1009
lisktop Novirteaseord
. D. geTAQQAUT
71liOTAGGART
Taggart ros.
.GENERAL IBANKINO
TR4NSACT4D. NOTMS
SCOUNTSD. DRAFTS ISSUED
TEfeCteST ALLOIIMP 014 DE-
SiTS. SALM NoTgs PURCK-
Bro..
.irk !M. cr.*.
RANOX.
YOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY-,
ANOMR, FINANCIAL, REAL,
ESTATE AINID FIRE INSUA-
(.TING 14 FIRM INSURANCE
400,4406E AGENT, IIMPUMSEN-
?"
COMPANIZS.
Drill$TON COURT OFFICE,
CLINTON.
r
e BR:Y/3MM;
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTA.RY, PUBLIC. ETC.
FI-eSloane INTO.N.
RARLMS 13. HALE
REAL ESTATE
and
INSURANCE
FFICE -
46.
1-111RON ST.
,•41.
R. W. GUNN
L. R. C. P., L. R. C. S.
Edinburg
Office --Ontario street, Clinton.
.calls at front door of office or at
residence on Rattenbury street.
h•:Dfi. J. W. SHAW-,
.orrzcz-.
• , , • .
RA.TTENBURY ST, EAST.
-CLINTON.-
'OMPSON.
PAYSICIAL, SURGEON, ETC:
Special attention given. to dis-
eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and
Throat.
Eyes carefully examined and suitable
glasses. prescribed.
Office and residence : . 2 doors west of
- the Commercial Hotel, Huron St.
-DR. F. A. AXON. -
(Successor to Dr. Holmes.)
Specialist is Crown and Bridge
work,
Graduate of the Royal College of
Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Honor
,graduate of University of Toronto
Dental Department. Graduate of the
Chicago College of Dental Surgery
Chicago.
Will be at the Commercial hotel
Bayfield, every Monday from 10 a. Da,
to P• In.
_
Gomm.
-TIME TABLE -
Trains will arrive at and depart
from Clinton Station as follows;
BUFFALO AND GODERICH DIV.
Going East 7.35 a. m.
14 3.07 p.m.
5.15 p.
11.07 a. m.
1.25 p. m.
8.40 1 p.m.
11.28 p.
& BRUCE DIV.
7.50 a. m,
4.23 p. m.
11,00 a. tn.
6.35 p. m.
,t It
Going Nest
1
t
t
LONDON, :HURON
Going South
tI
Going North
I 14
•
••••••••....
60 'MARS'
EXPERIENCE
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS •
COPYRIGHTS &O.
Af11,0ina sending la Sketch end description May
aulealy ascertain our Ontnion free ',Nether sn
nwenttors I probably patentahls,_Dommunloz.
Mons strictlyeceindeettai. HANDBues on entente
Jent free. Oldest agency for accurmg j)atents.
patents taiten-tbroagh Munn to CO. receive
special rtoftScad Withont charge. tattle
Itt grit
bendeemely illnatreitod Weekly, Largest de.
iplatton of any aciontinO Journal. Tenet, for
nanad2,i7S,75 yeartpOstsge prepaid, eola
neennestete.
11111 a CO 1618"144"' NOW York
Wane Mete, 68 I fit..Weraisetten,13.0„
LIPPINCOTT'S
MONTHLY MAGAZINE
A FAMILY Lif6RartY
The Ilast ki Current Literature
ig COMPLarg NOvieLt YeariLif
MANY SHORT STOMICS AND
PAPERS ON TIMELY TOPICS
0.150 EIAIij 26 Ora. a COPY .
INO CONTINUE* vrortits.
tvoet LiMattit 60MOLite tte ereteLe
LONDON, ONTARIO
Buiness.,& Shotiband
TS
Rossirleot alind Mkil Courses
Fro*
Wootorvelt, 1. W. Wenervelt. Jr., C.A.,
pripeteel; Vice-Peineleel.
Dining Room
Suites.
Fancy flatlet -Large Mime,. Long
Linen. Drawer, reg. MM.
Extension Table -Quarter Cut Oak
Finish, round or square, reg. $10.
Six •Cbairs-1 Large Arm Chair and
5 small chairs, seated with leather,
, reg. $10,00.
THE COMPLETE SUIT4
FOR $47,50.
(I„ 11.. Cheliew-
13.1;4.7Y7DE:
BUNK. TtiOS.
Having purchased a machine for
applying Rubber Tires, we wish to
say that we are now prepared to fur-
ish and put on suen tires at reason,
ble rates,
We also do all kinds of Grinding,
nything from a pair of scisSOrS to a
irculaX saw. This week we installed
machine for grinding horse clippers
which does perfect work.
We likewise do all kinds of lathe
York on short order and at reason-
ble rates.
Machinery repaired, 'Horses shod.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
Beau & West
FARM PRPF/TS
Kay be. lareely issereasei by knowing .the
exact .eeterlitiel ei eire 'rezraer'a market,
and by learning eif the is* method in
farm practise. • lade s peecieely the
sort of fas:nrasetiess tee iteeeness' Weekly
Sun eves to priory loess.. lit Us Ile equal
aa a Peewees Deteinose Poor., Goect
farmers' Feet' en it. Yu peke, see ene
clubbiaz
tomirierwepy.
p 21 11,1 New Discoveries by an old physician
Us 4 ah C.N. Tablets torintereat use. C. N. A
AND local nourisher for external use.
The two -both used in __conjunct -
C A ion at the same time produces more
a 'invigorating, vitalizing and rejuvenat-
ing effects then MO ever before been offered. Stiff -
eters front vital weakness and `lost vigor, that
saps the pleasures of life, will And one Of each
produces wonderful invigorating, enlarging and
lasting results. The two -one of each vrill be
sent by mail in a plain package 011 receipt of this
.advertisenientand two dollars. -Address ,
The Nervine Company wurnsort,Oise.CArsiza.
THOMAS BROWN, LICENSED AUCe
tionecr . for the counties of Euron
and Perth. Correspondence protaPt7
ly answered. Inunediate arrange-
' /bents can be Mao forsale (dates at
The News -Record, Clizlon, or by
calling phone 67, Seaferth. Charges
moderate and se.tisfaetien guaran-
teed,•
Tfte McKillop filutuatriTe
insurance Companu
-Feral. and, Isolated Town Property-
. -Only Insured-
• --OFFICERS--
J, B. McLean President, SeatorthP
O. ; Thos. iraSer, Vice-Presidere;
Brucefield P. 0.; T. E. Hays, . pee.
Treasurer,. Seatortn P. 0. •
-Directors- .
William Shesney; Seaforth ; Joh
Grieve, Winthrop.; George Dale, Sea
forth;. John Watt, Harloelt
Bennewies, flrodhagn ; , Ja mes Evan
Beechwood James Connolly,
e -AGENTS -
Robert Smith, liarlock,;
Seaforth ; Janaes Cummings
Egmotadville ; J. W. Yea. Holmes-
ville. •
Parties desiroue to effect insuranee
or transact other business wilt.- be
'promptly attended to on applibatio
to any of the aboVe offieers addressed
to their respeetive postal -lees. Leese
inspected by the director who live,
nearest the seene.
Clinton News -Record
CLINTON' ONT
Terms of subSeription-$1 per year in
advance $L50 may be Charged if
not so paid. No paper discontinued
until ali enters ate pajd, tudese at
the opiniot of the publisher. Pita
date to which every tMbacription is
paid is denoted on the label.
A.dvertieing ratea•-•Trataient ativer-
tisernents, .10 Cents per nonpariel
line for first insertion and 8 cents
per line for each subsequent insert.
ion. Small advertisearteets not to
&Wed one inch, sad. aS "Lost,"
“Strayed," or ''StOlen," , in-
ierted once for 35 cents and eatlx
subseauent insertion 10 cents.
Communications intrnded for publica-
tion must, at a guarantee of gond
faith, be aceOmpanied by tbe name
of the 'Writer.
41% niffC/IELL#,,
. Editof\and Proprietor.
among tbe eoloneri papere and With-
out Vorattly were powerless to pursue
a search for them. We advertIsed and
employed detectives, witit no result.
It seems thet father nod daughter
were at Monte Carlo ut the time."
"Beautifully eirentuutantial. my clear
lady," Commented Kirkwood to hie
inner coneciousness. Outwardly Jae
mainteined consistently a poet* of
passive gullibility.
"Thle afternoon for tbe first time we
received new of the Calendurs,
*alder bloteelf called upon me to beg
• loan, I explained our ditlieulty, and
."Scottand Yard," he 'told ber bkortieu
Iso proniised Bait Dorothy should send
us the • informatien by the ,morning's
post. -White I insistedbe agreed to
-
being it lainneelf after 'dinaer .thia
•evening: I milky it quite. clear?" she
ieterrupted, .4 little 'asaxiOns. • •
• "Quite 'elettr, 1 assure you.". he as-.
sented eneouregingiY:
"Strangely enbugb,.tte had not been
gone .ten minute when my sou came
• le from a. conference. With our so-
lieltors, inferining me that at last a• .
memorandum bad tweed up,*.indigat-
ing that *the heirlOorns would be foam]
• "it safe 'Secreted belitud a dresser in
Colonel Burgoyne's bedroom." •
"At No, 0 Frognall street," • .-
"Yes.. propeeed .going there at
one*, but It -wad late,. and We were
dining at. the Pleas with'un acquaint.
unce, a Mr..atifireatly,..whont'l now re'•
relit as a .former Ultimate of • George
Calendar. To our surprise,. we saw
'Calendar and his ilaughter ata Mbie
.not far front our. Mr. Mulreadybe.
(rayed some agitation at the sight of
' Calender and told. itte Ilint Scotland
rard had it man mat with a' Warrant
for Catendera arrest, on old charges.
roe old state's sake Mr. '51tilready beg•
glel nip:to give Calendar a word el
warning, I did so -foolishly, it seems.
• Caleudar was at that moinent ;plain
ning to rob ns, • &Unready aiding and
abetting bin" •
:rho woman* paused befpre lairkwoOd.
• looking dawn open him.. "And sO,"
She eoncluded„ "We. haee been: tricked
and swindied. I can scarcely believe it
• 'of Dorothy calendar." • • :
:"1, for one, don't believe it." Kirk.
wood Spoke quiekly, rising. "\Vhatevei
the euipahilitY of Calendnr rind Mut..
ready; Dorothy was wily their hood.
winked .. •
"lint, Mr. Kirkwood, she must* have
ktrown the Jewels -were not hers." . •
"Yes," he . assented' passively,. but
•wholly unconvineed. • -•
. "And what," she demanded, with te
• gesture of exasperation-ewhat would
yOu advise?"
"Seotland Yerd," he Iola' her bluntly.
"Bet it's a fatuity Secret, It toilet
not appen,r•Th. the papers. Don't
understand? George Calendar is :my
husband's cousin!". •.• •
el cell mink et notping else unless
you purstte them in person,"
. "But whither?" „
• "Thar remains to. lye 'discovered.. I
ran tell you nothing more than 1 have.
May 1 thank yon for your hoepitality,
express tny regrets thstt I should un•
wittingly. hnve lie.Ort made the agent ot
this disueter and wish ,von good hight
or. t her, , good morning, Mrs. .Rat•
lam"• •
Por a moment sew held him undet fl•
calculating gill nee, which he withstood
with genceless fortitude. Then, realle.
• Ing that he was detertelned not.by
means tO he won to bee (*apse, she
gaVe him 1)er hand. With a coalman.
place wish ahat he might find bit af•
fairs in better order than seemed prole
hie, and rang for Eceies,
The butler showed Win out.
"Weil," tippreciated ir. Kirkweod,
with etista, "s he's got Ananias and
Sri h Irt rilittql to n se:m(18011, al.
right!" U.e reinitiated over tlIIS for a
moment. •"Calentlur enn lie some, too,
but tinnily v1tli her picturesque touch.
tneomnion ingettloits, 1 call it. 411
the same, there were only about a
dozen bits of thing that didn't tit Elite
her ploside a little bit. 1 think they're
all tarred with the same save -nil but
the glel, Alld there's sometbine
afoot a long sight mum devilish and
entity tlittn that shilling sheeker
tnf:tdn m's Dona hy en lend:Ire got
inueli nctive pert In ft Os )
imee. rm front 'California, bat
they've got to show me before Pll
Here n wort) ettainst her. Those In.
fertial seoutelrele! Somebody's got tt
be on the girl's side, and I seem te
lame drawn the lucky teraw. Good
beevenel• Is it possible for n groWt
men to fell !teen; over head. In love It
tiro short hones-, I don't believe it
Ite just interest -nothing Mere. Ate'
" Joseph Vance
CopYritibf• 1608, by 'the BobbaelYierrIll Co.
en bane to bait) n'clittnge of clothes
before I CAS. do anything further."
Elo struck aerose tow» tut direellY
es might' be for St. l'auerasi etetion.
It would undoubtedly be tt Wag walk,
but cebs were prohibited by his strait-
ened means, end the butes wore .all
abed and wouldn't boe astir for hours.
He strode along rapidly, tindlug his
way more tbrough. Intuition titan by
observation .or familiarity mrith Lon-
don's geography -Indeed. was ieuree
Aware of til e 'aurroundings. for his,
brain was big with One Imagery, rapt
in a glowlute dream of ititigitt erreuttY
and chiralric deeds.
CEPAPTER XIII. • .
KIRK:WOOD wasted tittle time.
lie bed not melt•to waste
were he to do thet Upon wbose
doing be had set Ws heart. It
irked him 'Imre to have to loSo the In-
valuable moments tieuntuded by cer-
tain imperative arrangements, .but his
httste Was such that all wee -consum-
mated vtithin en boar.
Within the period of a single bour,
then, tie had ransomed his luggage et
St. Pancree, ettueed it to be
ensfeered
heeded
upon a four wheeler and tr
to a neighboring hotel of evil flatter,
engaged
but moderate tariff, wherr be
• a room for a week, ordered an inane -
with his
diete breakfast and retired
belonginga to hie room. tle bad shay-,
ed and changed his clothes, selecting a
eervieenble ault of heavy tweeds, stout
a
shoes, a fore and aft cep aud n*0.
gee shirt of a deep shade, ealettiated at
ong time.
Aeon
owl burn -
edit dins
least to seem clean for.. l
Finall he had deroured hie ' and
ego., gulped down his coffee
ed his inonth end, armed with a stout
*tick. set Off hotfoot in the
glimmering of early day.
.. By this time his cash -eapital..haci
10e. Ed.
Wes bad
dwindled to the sum of £2
and would have been mutt
be paid for his lodging in actentlINI.
the
At King'e Crofts etetion on un-
derground en acute disappointment
don. A
awaited • him. 'There likewise), be
learned something about Lon
sympathetie bobby informed him that
uttil atter
no trains would be running t
5:30 and that, furtheratege, se busses
would begin to ply until half after 7.
nit's tramp it or eab ft, these" massed
• the young man. mournfully, has ItettiP,
Ing gaze seeking a nearby gob' reek?
just then 00v:staled by a solitary' ban -
the' bex.
the' pce
e -1st' aaie
Bona driver ' somnolent en
"Otlacer"-he agate addressed
Heemart, roindfni of the. La
tom; "When in doubt ask a biebby"-e
' "dffieer, when's high tide .
this taaors-
• The bobby peoduced a. well worn
pocket almanac, moistened a• aussatee
thumb and rippled the pagee. ,
, ,"Londate bridge, figh tido twenty
•mitiutes arfter 6, sir," be announced,
with a, glow et. satisfaction w.holly
. pardenable in one who .comblnitts- the
functions of perambulating almanee,
guidebook, encyciopedie mid compere-
er of the peace. •
Kirkwood said 'something beneath '
his breath, a word In Itself 'a com-
fortable mouthful.end wholestottie and
emphatic. Ile' glanced again • at the
cab and groaned,'40 I just. des-.
sent!" .with -Which, thanking tbe' bre
reau of information, he set off -rapid.'
lys down Grey's inn rood to -end the
,Alethen before she salted. Proceeding
up4einlatinhe ww4o4tipf4.sllt i
rifing1 11.lytaheistlis • t het Mrs.
n
r inmost
respects, but. had Mid the truth so, far
as concerned .aer statement to the ea -
feet that the gladstane bag contained
• Valuable property, 'whose ownership
.remainea a tuoot 'question, though.
Kirkwood• nets definitely cotetifitted to
the belief that Itwas none of. Mrs.,
• Hallam'S or her son's, • he reasoned
that the two adventurers, with pore..
• thy -and their booty, would attettutt to
leave London by a Water rotate in the
• Ship Alethea, whose name had fallen
front 'their lips at Bermondsey Old
Stairs.
Kirkwood's initial task, Men. ,would
be to find the nekile in the haystack.
The, metaphor Is. poor -Mere properly,
to eat opt from the nundreds.Of Vbs.
sets of all descriptions at 7atiebor in
midstream, ineored to .tlie Wharfs of
• longshore warehOusits or. in .the •gigan-
tic docks that line the Thames. that
one called Alethea, of whieh• he was
so deeply mired hi ignorance tau be
• could not say whether she were •trarcip
steamer, eoastwise passenger boat,
one of the liners that ply between Ttl.
sbury suet all the 'world, chaunel ferry.,
boat private yacht (steana or, sail).
• scbootter, four maker, sqUere rigger,
bark or brigatitine..
'..London bad filmed overonce or .
twice and was pulling the bedclothes
over its head and grutubliag about get -
Mg up, but the city witsstilt sound
fteleep, when nt length* ite pitused for n
reintite'a reit in ftemt,of the Mansion
• Mame and realized, witb it pang of
despair, 'that he was completely teek-
Med out. •
With a sigh he surrendered to the
fiesiVe frailty: An early cabby, eruis-
ing up from • Cannon street station on
the off teetnee or .11ndIng some EMS
11011' in the eity itside from the doves
and sparrows, suffered 'the .surprite Of
• bis life when Kirkwood halted him.
"Jtlini) in, sir," he told Kirkwood
ebeerfully 00 soon am be had as:aniline)
ed the • latters denntrels. "1 knowe
preeleely woteher wants. Leave it ell
to me."
The admonition wae all but super
-
litmus. Kirkwood was unstiele for the
time Nana to do alight else than re -
elan Ills fate Into Another's goldnnee.
O!('e 111 the volt he slipped insensibly
Into 11 Imp 1111)1 slept soundly on, ne
'realties.% of the cab's swift pnee mid
eontIntions bouneing as of the sunlight
glaring Mein hie tired young fare.
HO may (twee eked twenty minittee.
TIP nWoke faint with drowsinese,
tin-
gllng from Neal to tee front fntigue
.ntid In distress ef it Muter quelm Ili
,the lift Of his stomach, to dad the bete
asta.tat At reaat. tad thea drivel' On the step,
etetklutt hie fere with irbully defend
tuition. -Oh. a' right," be assumed
surlily and 1,4 limier force of wIlt
nettle alai:wit elle& out to the side
walk. wbere, bariug rubbed hie eetse•
Istreteheti enormously tied ya trued dls
courteously In the fere Of 1110 PliSt end.
be was ones more Itituself mid a huts•
ere() times refreshed Into the bargain
• Contentedly he counted 3 sbiltiugs liito
nut bby's point. the fare named be-
ing an. and six.
"The alining; ever and above the
tip Is for Muting me the witterMao
and boat," be stipulated.
"Rignnel You'll mital tbe 'ors* a
minute, sir?"
Kirkwood nodded. The plan tonehed
bis hat anti dieappeared inexplicably,
Kirkwood, needlessly ea:telling him-
self to the reins near tbe• animal's
head, pried hie sense of observation
open and beesano elle° to the fact tisfit
he stood In a quarter of Loudon tut
strange to him as bad been Bermond,
(fey Wall.
TO this dee bo cennot put a name
to it. He surmises that it was Wap-
ping. His enbby popped hurriedly
Out of the. entranee to A tenement, a
dnil visaged, broad shouldered water -
man ambling more slowly after. •
aaTerry of mine, sir," ananineed the.
cabby, "and a fust ryte wittermen.
• Enows the river like a book; he do,"
Ttus nephew touchedhis forelock
sheepishly, •
• -Thank you." saki Kirkwood, and,
turning to tbe Man, "Your boat?" he
asked, with tbe brevity of wearinetol,
"This ',rye. sir." •
At hinguide's heels Kirkwood thread-
ed the crowd end then deeeetoled
to a floating stege to which -a beaey
rowboat lay moored. In the .baiter a
second .waterman Was seated, bailing
Out bilge with A rusty can. -„
4! 'Ere w* are, sir," mild the eabmaree
nephew, pausing at the bead Of tbe
etepet. vrbere's 1110 be?" •-
• .Tbo Amerkan explaleed tersely that
ite bed a message to deliver to
friend whe.had shipped aboard a yew)
knoere es 'tbe •Alethaa, ;scheduled. to
Mil at flood Ode, further Mae Which
deponent averred naught.
• The .watermen tecratebed his head.
!ard job,. sir. Not knowin* wot kind
of a boat alre are mykes it 'ardor," Be
• Watted hopetully,
"Tee 'Islinilitgs," volunteered -Kirk-
• weed promptly -"10 stililiege• if you •
get me, aboard her before she weighs.
aneher,.• 15 if • I .keep you 'Ont. More
than stn bourasted still you put me
Aboard. After that we'll .make otbei
The•
man p;omP. tlytu•rn. ed. .his beck
• to hall his Mate. "aasf,a quid; note if
WG "puts this 'gent Aboard a wessel.
:Same o' Anytimr afore. she syles et
trim , •
In the boat the.man with the bailing'
can* turned up, an impassIve counte-
nance, "Ceorn down." 'Het clinched the
bargain and set about shipping the
sweeps. , • . •
Bonet swinging downstream, the
boat sbot out from the shore. '
"How's the tide?". demanded Kirk-
Wood.his Impntience growing.
"Oh th' tern, sir," he .wes tela,
For it .leng: monteet.broadside to tbe
current, the hoot resnonded :to the
sturdy pulling. of the port sweeps. An
other. . moment ,and it was: • in hal
. Swing, tbe• tV,UNTITtell bending lustily
to their. task.. • Ship after. :ship was
passed,. and in keenanxiety lest he
ehonid overbook the right one
Wood searched their helve and sterns
fee names. witieb . In more than; one •
Moe aroved bardlY legible.
• The Alethea was not.of their num-
ber.. ' • *
Sn the aourse of some ten minutes •
thewetertrien drove the boat -eliaredy
inshore, bringing her up nlongside an-
other floating stage, in tkie sendoW of.
another tenement, both So like •those'
from which they had embnaked that
Kirkwood .would hare been u tt a ble, to
distinguish one from smother. a
Ln the bows old nob lifted up n sten-
torten voiee, Summoning one William. •
In. answer to the third. ear Packing.
• hail a men, clothed eimpla in dirty
shirt and disireputable trousers, showed
hinaself in the deorwny nboee, rubbine
•the sleep out Of ft red, Wonted eounte•
:name% with a mighty mai grimy net,
. 'DIM," he enici .emeity. aWota;
row?" •
"'Co," interrogated old *oil holding,
the boat steady by grasping the euteta
"Was -tie party wot ougyged yer !vet
. night. 1-3111?"
"Party name 0' Allytheer," growled
the erowey one, "w'yf'.' •
"Parte 'ere's lookita for atta Neatere
will • 1 find this llytheer?-
•. "nest look ;Tharp 'r yer won't find
'Pm'rettirtecl the one Metre. wns.
et tauter ort now meek Meet night "
K Irk veStales heart lett ped .In hove.
"Whitt sort of vessel Wns he
asked, holf teeing In lite ettgermeet.
"Itrignialee, 811` "
Arid ti aft in 1 be hn8t we tlytite ditwn
in midstream, the lenden wetter, .014/t
gt,1(1 tlf 00 morning ewe 18111 I8'
• sullenly betteteit ite bows. !lugging
the Inanely 141011`, tlIPy
bvilItit'eS tinning
hard. Young,. Wilthen looked tn Kirk.
wood, eatight Itis“eye and tu.dilet1 •
rnae, batumeng himself
agal»st the leap end sWey of I he bent
"teeinwitere'e 'Meg 0` 'ere"
• „Prom reahl to left las enger glance
meta the Helve.) wide -1116g 1`0111•11. Ve14.
seat were there inadetudenee, het no
beige 1111110, no melting vessel- of any type
The young n (Ty
thnt tens n sob of lattee (Henn-
peintnaent tie eta down talthlenly
"Shoal gone!" be eried in a hollow
weep
The tired bontinett tamed Muni their
mire, and old Belli (=toed up hr the
bowe, ;attuning the riverseepe trith
keen eyeft elifelded ity tt level palm
oTtlliron
eriTat drifted lietlessly with the
• 010 nob /tented, "Paw n't -see-nti
tt-
thi"o' 'cr." Ile resumed his sent,
'110/erP'. 11004). 1 AIIIPPOIrtr
The Wattle witeterieen snook ids bead
"Carel eye. tiitt be tenlift-nex*
Mend eitgitt - poodle rurticel.
11.444 le-nea as' prune Wilyunt 'ere
-can't de he innittra we as. WO be
Wore Wt."
'Yes," Rirltwee4. assented. ditivoneo•
late,• toyou'ett corning,' varued your
pay." Thest Ye'elves,V. wee
very pares in b.. rt, you know. "Cam%
you euggeet seratotielagrve get to
Catch that ship!"
taid Bob wegged Jbs Wiwi In Wow
negation; young trillium lifted bis.
"Theriot a rylewye runs by Wool.
'Melt," be Yeetured "Yee tuigItt tyke
trine an' go to Sheareees, sir. Yer'd
Old Bolivoriro4, 1)(mill-1,w-7-mart/I1
be positire o' pnesin"er if :she Man
syle• afore . 'teat tide. 'Ire a boat t t
Sheerness en' .pat out an' look fer 'er."
,"How fur's Woolwich?" Kirkwood
.demattded Instantly,
'Wile." sold the elder "man,. "Tyke
yer for lire bob extry." •
"Done"
Young William, dashed the sweat
'from his eyes, wiped his anlms oe his
hipand fitted the sweeps again to the.
wooden tholes. 010 Bob was tie rendy
With an luartieniete cry they gave
.way.
CIIA r'rEtt
an old hoettietn,seeneel inclined
• toward. optittlIsill when the
boat My -along:We:a I:indite,"
ttae ut Woolwich and Kirk-
wood had clambered ashore.
"Yeti! webby Melte tae waeca
Arign. Mid bite. with a weatberVrise sur•
vey of the skit*: , "Wind's freshenin'
from the lietst`rde, an' that'll 'old ler
beck e bit, sir." •.
• "Arsk th'..wye to th' Dorkyaril Sty -
shun,"• young voimateered.
. "'Us th' aborts& walk.. Air. • I 'om• its
yer catehes 'er. TitanitY, sir."• ••
He caught dexterously the sovereign
Which Kirkwood. In ungrudging liber-
ality, snared them of hts store Of two.
The Amerlean nod0ed acknowledg-
ments and sulietee, vritb a feded multi
deprecating his chances cif winning the'
race; orely handicuPPed as be was.
fl�wtis very, ret7 tired .and In' his •
heart suspected Mit .he would fail.
.But if he did he would et least be
• elate to comfort himself that it was
. net 'for lack of trying. • He set hip
7
teeth 011 voir4Mant le VW eaten,
tetuatien. Wther there Wel * Strata
Of the be,11,41eg latent in the Stritwood.
breta or oleo his Infetuattort grIpped
WM More Strongly then lor gineteted.
Yet he elaspeeted gontothileg of It*
WM. He knew that title WAS alto,
Efftker tut intlane proeeeding end that
the lure that led WM on woe Dorothy
Caltetder. A tarange. anti tight glowetf
In ba WeeXY eye* on the thought of
her. lied go through fire end water
in her eervIve. She was eiost' Lug bias
dear. perlutpe Was to VOSt 11114 dearer
Wit, and perhaps there'd. 1* for his
gaVerdeu rto more than a "Titelek. yew,
Mr. Kirkwootir nt*the end of tbe pas-
sage. But that would be no testes than,
hiss deaerto. H new not to target that
be Was interfering unwarrantably,.
The girl was in her father's hands,.
surely safe enough there -to the ens.
nal mind. if her partnership irt her
pareat's'fortunes were distasteful sbte
endured it passively, Without 'come
He (Melded. that It waft his duty to
remind himself front time to thaw
that his mein Interest must be in the
game itself. in the solutioa of the rid -
die. Whatever should befall, he must
look for no reward for ids gratuitous
and self appointed Part. Indeed, he
was ell but successfu) in persuading
himself that tt Was the faseinatima Of
adveuture alone that drew him on.
A bapelanace native whore he ores,
ently klicouutered Dirnished minutes
directious for renehlug the Doekyard
station of the Southeastern and Chat-
ham rnilway, adding romfortable in-
fortnntion to the effete that the nest
eastbound trait) wou'd in througir
In ten Minutes -if Kirkwood would
-
mend his pave be couid make it easily,
• with time to spare.
• Kirkwocd mewled his p01» tteeera-
• ingly. but, routrary to the prenietion,
had no lime to tevire at nil Dven as
he sti rtned the 1k t gratieg the train
was tenedering in at tite elatforae
There:a re a IP rt't Its 11 ,Ittl :tout
passed hie) eat: n fine- taties teem in.
stead of t lie tiara ales tie het a"kett
ft r, niti thPre wee eo time weeeein
•-Item the tv tee nee rte tired irawetue
planard elven) ille fare, sweep awe
fer 1 he t Prate 't's •
n -t why:.0 dorAr,
he perted tttptv. ono, hrt,,VU'L to ha'
" cra BE CONTINUED );
-Peter Itedieskt, who was accused of
the murder of his stepson, • had they
charge reduced to mauslaughter at
the Port 'Arthur Assizes. He pleaded
guilty. •
Established 1879
POP Wii0orttie cotton, CROUP.,
.sorgata„, Conan% BRaticlaiTIS, saga
THItoitT, CATARRB, DIPHTBERIA
"Vaporized Cresolene stops the paroxysms 'of
Whooping Cough. Ever dreaded Croup can-
not' exist where Cresolene is used. It nets
directly on nose and throat, tusking breathing
easy in the case of colds. soothes the sore
threat and stops the cough. Itis a boon to
sufferers of Asthma. •
• Creselene is a powerful germicide. acting both
CS a curative nnd0. preventive in contagious
• diseases. Cresolene's beat recommendation is
its thirty years of successful use. •
for SMO tytU Drab -Vas
Send Postal for Pc-
scriptivo liooklet
Cresolone Antisuptic
Throat Tablets. ample
. end soothing for the
• irritated throe -I, loc.
Lerminl, Milos Co., •
Lielitest, A fixate: Mee-
Cannela. soS
ived fortwo
ars2.
as an Indian
• The Strange Quest of a College Graduate and
• its Remarkable Result
. Nearly a pettuty, ago, iesiah Morse,
the son of w.elleto-clo parents, had just
oompleted, the most thorough medical
edination winch- the colleges of ,that
time Offered, and was casting about
for a favorable- Owin which to start'
practieing. His father, himself a phye •
alder) of the old sphool, convinced that
his aoa had thoroughly mastered the
theory Of medicine, advised that before'
settling down ho • try to gale more
practical knowledge of the science.
Rumors -were afloat at the'timathat
certairt Indian tribes had discovered
remarkably successful-metboa of treat-.
beg the more common forms of illness
with certain iterns and roots... The
elder Morse suggested that his son en-
deavor to find out from. the Indians
the secret of this cure. . '
.The idea appealed strongly both to
young Morse's Imagination and to his
sober judgment, and he set out eagerly
on the„quest.Practically aaandoning
civilization, he made his home tonOng
the.andians for two or three years,
• Reticent by nature, the sons of the
forest declinea at Sint to give him the
information which he sought,though
he was shawft plenty et evielonees ot
the value 61' the remedy winch they'
had discovered. Month after tateetth
he lived wirti them, in their way.. He
learned their language, entered heartily
into their spates, hunted, fished and
ttte with them. -He listened attentive-
ly to their old men recounting the
history and legends of their tribes, and'
rgionoadilywww. d
on their confidence an
Tame whet. the Indiane had come to
look upon him as their white brother;
they revealedjheir secret methods of
compounding the wonderfel remedy.
IIe teamed what reets and herbs they
used, when ,and where they gathered
them, and how they made them into
the specific which cured most of their
ailments,
• trirging with hitn a supply of the
roots and herbs,Dr. Morse returned to
eivitizatiot and started practice, ur,ing
the Indian remedy 'with great sueceen
for many common ailments, such as
bilioushess, eonetipation, dyspepsia,
liver and kidney trouble and rheuma-
tism. For convenience he clianged
it from the liquid form to pills.
Comstock Brothers purchased the
formula front Dr. Morse when he re.
tired from praetiee, and in 1651 W. II.
Cometock be.earne tote owner. VP to
th1S timo the pills were only known
locally, hut Mr. Corristoret, thoroughly
convinced of their great value, believed
that they were worth introducing to
the whole world, and determined that
he would do it, as far as he eoum.
ne.began in- a very Modest way, es-
tablishing 'small laboratories it Brock -
vine, Ont., and aeroes the St. Law-
rence, on the .A.morican side irt Mar-
ristewn, where he compounded himself
the plils which ha named 13r. ItIorsfea
Indian Poet Pills."
l'hen, with a horite and waggon, be
teaVelled through*Upper arid Lotter
Canatla, from Sarnia. to Montreal, and
through the.Maritirne,Provinces, plac-
ing the Pills not only in the city and
town drug etores, but With every
cross-roads dealer.
The same W. IL Comstock is now
the active. heacl of an organization that
covers the globe'. • In the bait century
since he made Dr. Morse's Indian Root
himself, he has sueceeded In In-
troaucine thmt into practicany every
lkely anli unlikely ,corner of thoworide
Millione of boxes are sent out every
-
year from the Jai:oratorios at Brock-
ville, Canada; Morris town, • U.S.A.;
Sydney, • Austraiia,and Wellington,
New Zealand, and the demarid Is step --
day growing. •
Medical sciencit has made enermonm
strides sineDr. Motto returned from:
tfie Inalan lodees with the secret of;
their remedy, but has not yet been.
able to Make any improvement in his; .
formula. From timeto time .bxperts"
in materla mealea have studied the
formela mith the greatest care, but
have been forced to admit that nothing.'
better cart be devised for its purposes.. wt.i
Almost atone among the makers' of
proprietary remedies, Mr. Comstock
-
has every process In the preparation
ef Or.. Morse's Tpdian Root Pills car-
ried out it his own laboratories.• The
roots and herbe are bought le the crude
state, and ground, prtpared and made
into pills under the careful super-
vision or the Comstock eltemitts. Mr.
Comstock feels thnt only ih this WaY
can he 13, al solutely certain cf the
perity and accurate compounding of
11r, riterse's Indian Poet Pills.
One of tile results of this perfection
both of the formula and of the making
Is that when the Pttro Isood Laws of
Canada anti the United States came
tote force not a tangle change vas ne-
cessery in any of the ingredierts or in
the formula of Br. MorseIndian Root
Pills.
The virtue of tbe pale lies in their
extraordinary power of eleanSing the
body front alt impurities, One of the
iparedients opens up the Pores of tee
skirt' another clears the rteneoutt
inenibrane of lunge and ale passages;
a third stimulates the Walleye, while'
a fourth regulatee th bow1g. Thua•
the four organs that rid the 1360
indigestible food, worn out tissues, and'
ell poisonous matteta aro brought hike
ilcalthY action, and disease driVen out.
Scores of new prennratlenn, purport-
thg to the saune. reituit,
have tome alai gone. Catchy nernen,
attraetive packages, and laviill adver-•
ilsieg • have been Used to sell there.
But Br. Moree's Indian Resit Pills, stilt
put up in the originat, Old-faehloned
chip box in wniels Mr. Comstock first
packtal therri with hIS own bands, with
the plainest Of Vain wrappers, regis-
tered in 1857, have gone qutetly on
their way, curing and gaining fricruis•
and It may be truly be said that the
IS scarcely a 15Inee Ift Canada where,
Medieines Ard Stntl Itt Whiell YOU carve
not get 1)r. Morse's ttidian Itookrins.